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Northshore Page 10

by Sheri S. Tepper


  ‘Do you think it’s Servants?’ he asked the guard, one with younger eyes than his own.

  ‘It looks like it through the glasses, Your Grace. Carrying something. It’s a new one on me. I’ve never seen those fliers carry anything.’

  ‘If you’re in attendance when they land, Captain Velt – that is, assuming it does land – remember not to say “flier.” The correct title, if there’s a Talker, is “Uplifted One.” If there’s no Talker with them order the bowmen to kill them as soon as they land.’

  ‘I’ll remember, sir.’ The captain flushed.

  ‘In the meantime, perhaps you’ll be good enough to find the Deputy Enforcer and suggest he join me here …’ He took the glasses back from the guardsman and peered into the wedge of sky once more. At least two Servants of Abricor, flying north of the Teeth in defiance of the treaty, carrying something. ‘Hurry, Captain,’ he suggested through clenched teeth.

  Shavin Bossit was not the only one to have spotted the flier. From a window of his suite high in the library wing, Propagator of the Faith Tharius Don stared through a glass both newer and more powerful than the one used by the Maintainer. After much searching and many trials, he had had it secretly procured from the lens makers in Zebulee, an acquisition not to be displayed but to be kept wrapped in an old sheet in the bottom of his clothes chest. He had had his own watches posted here and there throughout the Chancery. More than one rooftop at Highstone Lees carried his men, one of whom had called his attention to the approaching blot on the sky. When he identified the winged speck as probable Servants of Abricor, he buried the glass beneath his clothes once more and stood gnawing his lip, cold beads of sweat starting out on his forehead and in the edges of his beard. Servants. Possibly one or more Talkers. If a Talker, then certainly one concerned about heresy. It had been all the fliers had wanted to talk about at the recent convocation. Heresy. By the waters of surcease, he was not yet ready for this. Not ready at all. It was too soon. But if he avoided being part of whatever confrontation was about to take place, the others would interpret his absence not to his credit, though they might assign him varying motives depending on who was doing the assigning.

  ‘So long as they do not know my true motives, it should not matter,’ he told himself. It was a kind of litany. There had been a time when Tharius Don had cared much for the opinions of others – even of others here in the Chancery. That time was long gone. Now he played the moralist, sometimes the fool, and told himself it did not matter. Wiping the sweat from his forehead, he slipped out onto the stairs. Like it or not, he would have to be obtrusively present – a need with which the Maintainer of the Household might not be entirely sympathetic.

  Gendra Mitiar was told about the approaching Talker by a servant sent by Shavian. ‘His Grace says to come to the small council room as soon as you can.’ The servant bowed. Thin and dried, a woman of great age, her face long since settled into a vertical assemblage like eroded gully walls, her skin the same dun color as the winter fields, Gendra Mitiar stared at the messenger. When she spoke, it was to reveal vast yellow teeth jutting like monuments from her pale gums; flat, inexorable teeth that ground together from time to time, making the sound of millstones. Her voice was like herself, colorless and strong, betraying an unostentatious but terrible will.

  ‘Tell His Grace I will be with him shortly,’ she said.

  ‘And may Potipur help us,’ she added to herself, grinning in vicious humor. For it is certain old Obol won’t.’

  Shavian Bossit was irritated beyond measure. ‘I can understand your annoyance at being … ah … flown here against your will, Uplifted One. I can appreciate the discomfort of having a whip lashed about your throat in midair and being threatened with strangulation. However, I can also understand the panic felt by our Superior of Baris. Your action was in defiance of the treaty. You admit as much.’ He tapped his fingers impatiently, glaring at the Talker standing against the wall. The damn flier would not take tea, would not act like a rational creature, would not sit, though they could and often did. Shavian hated looking up at people, much less fliers, though his diminutive size let him do little else. He ran his fingers through jet-black hair, dyed each ten-day by his mute body servant, and frowned in exasperation. Where in the hell was Gendra!

  ‘I have explained already,’ the Talker croaked from a throat not only unaccustomed to human talk but largely unfitted for it by the recent and lengthy half choking he had experienced at Ilze’s hands. The flight had taken some days, and the whip had been around his throat for most of that time. ‘The treaty does not apply in this instance.’

  ‘You have said so.’ Shavian kept his voice carefully without emotion. ‘You have not said why.’

  ‘I am not required to do so. I demand you accept my word that such is the case.’

  Shavian pondered the possibility of simply sending this creature away. He would never have thought of insulting a Talker, any Talker, when he was younger and the promise of life offered by the Payment had seemed irresistible. Now he toyed with the idea. It was sad to think the wisdom and resolution of age might be only weariness and pain. Effort avoided became pain avoided, and ennui masqueraded as good sense. So he told himself, not speaking any of it aloud. When he spoke again, with every appearance of courtesy, it was to remark in an uninterested voice, ‘The treaty does not permit you to demand anything of the kind. I will listen to reasonable talk, flier. I will not listen to bombast, which is what you have given me thus far.’ To call a Talker ‘flier’ was no less an insult than to turn one’s back, which Shavian also contemplated doing.

  The Talker’s beak flushed red, a deep, winey color betokening fury. Shavian regarded this without apology or change of expression. The damn thing had very nearly forced his way into the Protector’s bedroom. Potipur knows what old Obol would have made of that! Or what the Jondarites would have done! Killed the Talker, probably. Then they would have had to kill the others to keep the word from getting back to the Talons. Which might not have worked, for other Talkers or mere fliers might have seen these during their long flight toward the Chancery.

  Well, it had been a disaster narrowly averted. Shavian had called on a hand of Jondarites to bring the Talker here, to the small council room. So far as the Lord Maintainer was concerned, Talker of the Sixth Degree Sliffisunda of the Talons had received as much courtesy as was due him.

  This thought, or some similar sentiment, must have occurred to the angry Talker as well, for in a few moments the furious color faded. When the flier spoke again it was with grudging courtesy.

  ‘We believe these two may be implicated in the Riverman heresy.’

  ‘Indeed? I find that hard to credit. In any case, this suspicion should have been reported at once to the Propagator of the Faith, and he would have sent for them to accuse and ascertain the truth.’

  ‘We did not wish you to send for them. We wanted to question them at the Talons.’ The words were clear enough, though it was hard to tell what the intonation was meant to convey.

  ‘So you have said. Still, you have not said why.’

  ‘I will not say,’ Sliffisunda’s beak flushed again, only slightly this time.

  Oh, these Talkers didn’t like subordination. High mucky-mucks, all of them, and proud! By Potipur, they’re proud. A servant came forward with tea. Shavian took a cup, offering none to the flier. It had refused before; let the refusal stand. When the silence was broken by a rap on the door, he called, ‘Enter,’ knowing already who was there. The woman and the man who came in wore faces as carefully blank as his own; their bows toward Sliffisunda were sketchy, a bare politeness. The Talker stood against the wall, unmoving, looking them over with unblinking eyes.

  ‘Uplifted One, these are staff members of the Chancery. At the most recent convocation you met the Dame Marshal of the Towers, Gendra Mitiar. The gentleman with the large knife is Bormas Tyle, Deputy Enforcer to Lord Don. Put the knife away, Bormas. The Talker is not threatening us. Yet.’

  He beckoned t
hem to the table, offering cups only to them, interrupted in this calculated insult by another tap at the door and the entry of someone he had not sent for.

  ‘Lord Maintainer,’ said Tharius Don with an ironic bow. ‘I saw my Deputy Enforcer waiting upon you and came to inquire if I might be of assistance.’

  Shavian Bossit poured another cup, seething inside. He had not wanted Tharius Don this morning. Lately he had not wanted Tharius Don at all. The man had a chilling way with him. Like the knife cut of cold conscience. ‘The Lord Propagator of the Faith, Tharius Don,’ he said, making introductions. ‘The Uplifted One, Talker of Sixth Degree Sliffisunda of the Talons. I have apologized to the Uplifted One for the absence of other members of the council.’ Of the seven, four were present. A quorum, he thought. Though he would have traded Tharius Don’s presence in a moment for that of the Ambassador to the Thraish, Ezasper Jorn.

  He turned back to the table, making a wry mouth at the Dame Marshal and commenting, sotto voce, ‘Ezasper Jorn should be conducting this little exercise as Ambassador to the Thraish, but both he and Koma Nepor are off somewhere. The Protector, of course, would be of no help.’ He shrugged, taking more tea for himself. ‘I know I am discourteous. This Uplifted One has set my teeth on edge.’

  ‘I assume you have reason for discourtesy?’ She turned toward the Talker, millstone jaws loud in the quiet room. Only the Talker heard it. The others were too long accustomed to the sound to be aware of it.

  ‘Indeed,’ he murmured, loud enough for the other humans to hear. ‘This Talker and two of his subordinates, also Talkers, went to the Tower at Baris and abducted the Superior and one of her senior Awakeners. They went with him under threat of great harm to all those within the Tower. His reason for doing so is that he believes them to be part of the Riverman heresy.’

  ‘He need not have troubled,’ said Tharius Don, his gray brows pulling together over black, suddenly angry eyes, in a face become as suddenly and unnaturally pale. The pallor had struck him at the mention of the Superior of Baris, and it did not leave him now. The bones of his striking face stood out in relief as he sucked in his cheeks, biting back a set of too revealing words to replace them with, ‘We would have fetched them here had he but sent word.’

  ‘Ah, but it was not his intention to fetch them here at all. He sought to take them to the Talons.’

  ‘The Talons! Human prisoners?’ Bormas Tyle slid the knife in and out of its sheath, cutting his words as he cut his hair, short and soft as velvet. The hair grew upon his forehead and down his neck onto the bulging muscles of shoulder and back, joining the velvet beard that half hid his mouth, making his head appear upholstered except for his cold serpent’s eyes. ‘By what right? The treaty forbids this.’

  ‘Indeed,’ Shavian smiled his three-cornered smile at them all and then at the Talker once more. ‘So I have said. To which the Talker replies that the treaty does not apply in this case, though he will not say why.’

  There was a silence that began as mere hesitation, becoming tumescent with something more ominous than that, a brooding expectancy broken only by the hiss of the Deputy Enforcer’s knife and the grinding of the Dame Marshal’s teeth. These hostile sounds pervaded the room, sliding in it like serpents.

  The silence was broken by Tharius Don. Such tension could breed nothing good, and in the absence of the Ambassador to the Thraish, someone had to take the responsibility of ending it. He moved with practiced ease, crossing the room and bowing the Talker to precede him into the corridor. ‘I am sure the Uplifted One would like to sit down. Perhaps he would honor us by joining his subordinates and having a cup of tea. I will prepare for him below, and we will beg his return when we have finished our discussion.’

  The Lord Maintainer sighed. For a moment there, he had felt something almost wonderful within, like lust, or youth, or rage. The possibility of hot conflict, maybe some blood spilled? His hands trembled. Whose blood? Most likely his own. ‘By all means, Tharius.’ He sighed. ‘By all means. Uplifted One? Will you go with the Lord Propagator? We will meet again a little later, when we have considered this matter.’

  It was quiet in the room after Tharius left. Gendra Mitiar cast questioning glances at Shavian Bossit from time to time, which he affected not to see. Gendra Mitiar had been uncollegial latterly. No, not only latterly, but for some time. Irascible. Given to ineffectual quarrels about trifles. She would not be content until her enmity for Tharius was out in the open, where she could gnaw on it publicly, something Bossit wasn’t sure he wanted to see. At least, not yet. He sighed, and then sighed again, drifting toward the window, his inconspicuous form gliding like a shadow.

  Suppose Lees Obol died. Shavian considered this, not for the first time. Suppose Lees Obol died of ostentatiously natural causes, and suppose, therefore, that General Jondrigar did not turn Highstone Lees into an abattoir through seeking the cause of Obol’s death. Suppose this not totally unlikely state of affairs. Who would be the next Protector?

  Gendra was in line, but she was not popular among the members of the Chancery council who would elect the next Protector. There were factions there. The Mendicants had a faction for themselves. Meaning what? Potipur knows. Shavian had his own supporters, of course. And Ezasper Jorn would be supported by the Thraish, who had their own way of bringing influence to bear. Research Chief Koma Nepor had been in Jorn’s pocket since Jorn got him his first dose of elixir, so those two council members could be said to make up a faction. And there was a faction for Tharius Don among the lower ranks of the Towers. Perhaps a stronger one than was generally known. Which would explain Gendra’s antagonism toward him, if an explanation were needed.

  Shavian ticked the connection into memory. He did not doubt Bormas Tyle had also a claque, ready to come forward. Bormas Tyle, however, could be managed, though he sometimes needed simple reasons to do what more complex motivations required, able to accept the former but being only confused by the latter.

  So, of the six surviving council members, there would be at least four contenders. Only Jondrigar and Nepor would not seek the office of Protector for themselves. Four would, including Shavian himself. Enough, he thought, to make rampant confusion.

  The door opened, closing behind Tharius Don with a final snick, like a scissors.

  ‘Guarded?’ Bormas Tyle asked, his knife sliding with creepy persistence in the sheath. ‘You have them well guarded?’

  ‘Relax, Deputy. I’ve put them in the reception room at the end of the corridor over the garden, the one with barred windows. You’ll recall there’s a grilled gate at the end of the corridor, and I’ve stationed six Jondarites there, all growling at the insult almost offered to Lees Obol. Sufficient?’

  ‘The damn things fly, is all,’ snarled Bormas. ‘You have to remember they fly.’

  ‘As we do remember,’ Shavian commented. ‘Well, you’ve all heard everything I’ve heard. If you’d care to offer advice.’ As when haven’t you? he asked himself. All of you. Endlessly.

  ‘How did the captives end up here?’ Gendra asked, shaking her head and running one fingertip up and down a long wrinkle on her cheek. She did this sometimes for hours at a time, engraving her fingertip into her face as though to deepen the crevasses already there. Up, down, up, down.

  ‘The senior Awakener – Ilze, his name is – brought a couple of whips with him, wrapped around his body under his clothes. Once in the air, he snapped them around two of the fliers’ necks – evidently he has had considerable practice with the whips – and Lady Kesseret told the Talkers they had the choice of flying to the Chancery or of being strangled to death. Luckily, she knew the way up the Split River Pass, or they’d have died on the heights. Damn fliers can’t get high enough to come over the Teeth. We may regret they came through.’ Bossit already regretted it, but it was not time to talk of that.

  ‘And where is the Lady Kesseret now?’ asked Tharius in a carefully neutral voice. ‘And the Awakener?’

  ‘I’ve got them both in the Accusers’ Hous
e. It seemed prudent.’

  ‘Prudent!’ He covered his terror with a pretended scorn. Kessie! In the Accusers’ House!

  ‘Until we know a bit more?’

  ‘Such as why they are suspected?’

  ‘Among other things, yes,’ sighed the Maintainer. ‘I was much tempted to send this Talker packing. Something told me it would be a mistake to do it or not do it, either way.’ Shavian pondered this. Prudence had come with age and was as tasteless in his mouth as food had become. Lacking the spice of feeling.

  ‘And the Talker won’t say why the treaty does not apply.’

  ‘I think we can figure it out,’ Shavian murmured, moving across the room to the tea service, taking a cup with him to a comfortable chair, where he sat, face wreathed in fragrant steam, making owl eyes at them through the mists. ‘At the recent convocation with the Talkers, we learned they are barely reasonable upon the subject of the Riverman heresy.’

  ‘That’s true,’ said Tharius Don carefully. ‘It was all they wanted to talk about. We traveled a great, uncomfortable distance to cross the pass to the place of meeting. There were matters of true import to discuss. This demand of theirs for a higher food quota in order to increase their numbers, for example. Gods, but that needed talking of. But no! All they wanted to do was huddle in dusty groups, ruffling their feathers – full of dander as they are to make me sneeze endlessly – and fulminate about the heresy.’ He fished a handkerchief out of his sleeve and erupted into it with a great play of gloomy recollection. Let them think him a fool. It was safer than the truth. Besides, the kerchief helped to hide his face.

  ‘True.’ Gendra considered this. ‘It was the same with all of them. They spoke of nothing else, always watching out of the corners of their eyes, as though to catch us in some cover-up. The Riverman heresy, and was it connected to the homosexuals or the celibates? As though they had anything in common!’

 

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